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While scholars have been studying the short story cycle for some time now, this book discusses a form that has never before been identified and named, let alone analyzed: the mini-cycle. A mini-cycle is a short story cycle made up, in most cases, of only two or three stories. This study looks at mini-cycles spanning the period from Anton Chekhov’s "little trilogy" (1898) to the "Alphinland" stories in Margaret Atwood’s Stone Mattress (2014), including texts by such authors as Stephen Leacock, Alice Munro, Robert Olen Butler, and Clark Blaise. Consideration is also given to marginal examples, like Sherwood Anderson’s "Godliness—A Tale in Four Parts" (1919), which can be seen as one story or four distinct texts unified under one title, and to what is called the "exploded" mini-cycle: one whose component stories are published with intervening stories between them rather than consecutively. For each mini-cycle, the analysis is based on close reading of both the linking elements—character, imagery, symbolism, and so forth—and the rhetorical and aesthetic effects of the mini-cycle’s being made up of distinct stories rather than constructed as one long narrative.



While scholars have been studying the short story cycle for some time now, this book discusses a form that has never before been identified and named, let alone analyzed: the mini-cycle.

Preface

Acknowledgements

Introduction

Chapter 1: The Sociology of the Short Story

Chapter 2: Anton Chekhovs "Little Trilogy"

Chapter 3: The Mini-Cycle within a Cycle: Stephen Leacocks Sunshine
Sketches

Chapter 4: The Prototypical Mini-Cycle I: Alice Munros "Juliet Triptych"

Chapter 5: The Prototypical Mini-Cycle II: Margaret Atwoods "Alphinland"
Stories

Chapter 6: The Collection of Mini-Cycles

Chapter 7: The Two-Story Mini-Cycle

Chapter 8: The Prototypical Mini-Cycle Plus: Clark Blaises "Porter/Carrier
Stories"

Chapter 9: The Exploded Mini-Cycle

Chapter 10: Marginal Cases

Conclusion
Allan Weiss received his Ph.D. in English from the University of Toronto (1985), with a specialization in Canadian literature. He has taught at York University since 1990, and is currently Associate Professor of English and Humanities. He has edited a number of collections of essays on Canadian fantastic literature, most recently The Canadian Fantastic in Focus (2014), a volume of proceedings of the Academic Conference on Canadian Science Fiction and Fantasy, of which he has been Chair since 1996. He has also published articles and given conference papers on Canadian fantastic literature both in Canada and internationally.